Van Dyke has been charged with first-degree murder and is no longer on the police department’s payroll, according to department officials.

The video shows in graphic detail the events that led up to, and following the shooting. They show a very different picture than what Chicago police were saying in the days after the incident on October 20th, 2014.

Police received a call of someone trying to break into cars and dispatched officers to the scene.

At the scene, officers found McDonald standing next to a car with a knife.

Officers followed McDonald in their squad cars until more officers arrived. Then McDonald punctured the front tire of one of the squad cars.

Officers then got out of their car and approached McDonald, telling him to drop the knife.

The Tribune report then reads: “The boy allegedly lunged at police, and one of the officers opened fire.”

McDonald was shot in the chest, taken to an area hospital, and pronounced dead there.

Here’s the graphic video in full (Skip to 5:22 for the actual incident):

Immediately, one will notice that McDonald did not “lunge” at police at all. Instead, he can be seen walking away from the police officers on the scene.

Secondly, McDonald wasn’t shot once, but a total of 16 times. While it is not conclusive in the video, it appears impossible for Van Dyke to have shot McDonald 16 times in the seconds from the start of the firing to when McDonald hits the ground. It appears that the majority of those shots came after McDonald was already down.

The shooting depicted in the video is not even close to resembling the self-defense line taken by Pat Camden, a spokesman for the Fraternal Order of Police, at the scene of the shooting.

CNN"The officers are responding to somebody with a knife in a crazed condition, who stabs out tires on a vehicle and tires on a squad car," Camden told CBS Local last year. "You obviously aren’t going to sit down and have a cup of coffee with them. He is a very serious threat to the officers, and he leaves them no choice at that point but to defend themselves."

The autopsy showed that McDonald had been shot 16 times, a far cry from the single "shot" in the original police narrative.

For Kaven and attorney Craig Futterman, who both received a tip nearly a year ago about the “horrific” nature of the police dash-cam video, the case of Laquan McDonald is just another example of how the police blotter dictates the narrative surrounding police shootings.